290 likes | 437 Views
Reflective Workshop Two ½ day workshops. Raising awareness of the power of food in understanding and caring for looked after children. WORKSHOP AIMS. To get us all thinking about the ways in which food is used by children and adults
E N D
Reflective Workshop Two ½ day workshops Raising awareness of the power of food in understanding and caring for looked after children
WORKSHOP AIMS • To get us all thinking about the ways in which food is used by children and adults • To focus on how food is used to communicate thoughts, actions, beliefs and relationships. Food can be a window into the everyday lives of children and carers • To think about food within the context of looked after care
RESOURCES FOR FOOD-BASED PRACTICE • Reflective Workshop: raising awareness (also an Interactive Introduction – online) • Reflective Tool: to think about the child you are looking after • JOTIT Notebook: for capturing reflections about food issues as they occur • Peer Support: using a specific group or staff meetings to explore these ideas and to think about intervention
TODAY’S ‘TAKE-AWAY’ MENU… • Building on current knowledge • Think differently about food • Get the Resource Handbook • Learn about the Reflective Tool • Learn about how peer support can be used to think about food and care • Having fun • Discuss with colleagues • Try something new
THINKING ABOUT CAKE • Many meanings • a treat/relaxation • pleasure/escape/guilt • building relationships • learning and participation • as recognition – preferences • makes you sad/feel excluded • celebrates success/reward • power: control/bargain/ sanction vs refusal • gets you noticed/creates timeprovides predictability • …? CONTEXT – FOR BREAKFAST?
THE ‘SCIENCE’ OF WHY FOOD IS IMPORTANT • The power of the ‘everyday’ in residential and foster care • Everyday meanings of food beyond nutrition • A symbolic medium through which relationships are played out • Complexity of residential/foster life (past, present and future colliding)
FOOD AND CARE STUDY • Basis for this workshop • Study undertaken by University of Stirling into food practices in three residential children’s homes in Scotland • Lots of interest from staff and from foster carers about the findings • Resource Handbook, children’s leaflet and academic journal articles but no ‘how to’ tools
FINDINGS: FOUR MAIN AREAS • Food in the residential/foster care context • Managing food routines • Food, feelings and relationships • Food tensions within residential/foster care
1. FOOD IN THE CARE CONTEXT • Food as a lens into the everyday • Interactions and meanings around food often taken for granted but they can also be a source of tension • Food is a powerful symbolic medium • How food is done says something about how care is done HOW DO FOOD PRACTICES CONTRIBUTE TO CARE AIMS?
FOOD AND CARE TRUST TESTING & SUSTAINING RESPECT GETTING TO KNOW EACH OTHER SENSE OF BELONGING KEEPING SOMEBODY IN MIND FEELINGS
2. MANAGING FOOD ROUTINES • Mealtimes can be ambiguous events – conflicting/tensions • How are food rules created and monitored? • How do these link with the aim of work/care with the child? • There are different approaches to managing practical issues around food: • Mealtime attendance; chores; access to snacks and equipment; health and safety regulations …
MEALTIMES … if somebody’s down or angry… it’s maybe no necessarily that they dinnae want dinner, it’s probably because they dinnae want to be involved wi everybody chatting and laughing and then, you now they’re just sitting eating their dinner while everybody’s going ‘ha ha ha’. You ken what I mean? (Colin, young person) It’s a positive thing for staff to have that sort of focus at different times of the day cause it’s a good chance to sit down and discuss what we’re going to do for the rest of the day or evening or whenever we can get them together as a group (Aaron, Care Worker)
3. FOOD FEELINGS AND RELATIONSHIPS • ADULTS AND CHILDREN • Managerialist/procedural culture • Relationships are messy and painful • Means of building and testing relationships • Links to recovery • Food as a safe ‘carrier of love’ • Food as a way of expressing and repressing feelings • I know you well/we are connected
REFLECTIVE WORKSHOP – VIEWS SO FAR Recap on reflections so far: • Handbook Part I • Food is ordinary, everyday • But it can be a powerful symbol (cake, your reflections) • Connections with food in care settings • Handbook Part II • Food routines can be ambiguous - create ambivalence • Mealtimes as an example; chores; snacks • Food routines can be personal – adjustment to change, case studies • Handbook Part III • Food, feelings and relationships
END OF DAY 1 ANY QUESTIONS?
BEGINNING OF DAY 2 WELCOME BACK
REMINDER OF WORKSHOP AIMS • To get us all thinking about the ways in which food is used by children and adults • To focus on how food is used to communicate thoughts, actions, beliefs and relationships. Food can be a window into the everyday lives of children and carers • To think about food within the context of looked after care
REFLECTIVE WORKSHOP – VIEWS SO FAR Recap on reflections so far: • Handbook Part I • Food is ordinary, everyday • But it can be a powerful symbol (cake, your reflections) • Connections with food in care settings • Handbook Part II • Food routines can be ambiguous - create ambivalence • Mealtimes as an example; chores; snacks • Food routines can be personal – adjustment to change, case studies • Handbook Part III • Food, feelings and relationships
4. FOOD TENSIONS IN CARE • Food practices reflect difficulties of balancing demands – home, workplace and institution • Through food, children and adults can feel both powerful or powerless • Control of food = control of child? • Power – resistance to control and care. Often no one feels powerful
FOOD ROUTINES IN RESIDENTIAL CARE: A JUGGLING ACT Three key tensions Creating a ‘home’ • Paying attention to children’s food preferences, and accommodating them • Providing home cooked meals • Regular mealtimes around the table • Mealtime conversations as a group • Changes in food routines to mark different times of the day, week or year. E.g. brunch, a TV dinner Being at work Managing ‘institutional’ constraints • It is the staff’s workplace • Measurable indicators of care • Fixed mealtimes for shift planning. • Mealtimes and cooking with children provide structured, educational tasks. • Mealtimes can be work-time for both staff and children • Rules and regulations limit choices, e.g. rights to safety and health can conflict with giving open access to food • Or menu choices exceed those of a ‘normal’ home. • The regulation of uses of time and space; a level of inflexibility • Eating within a group of ‘strangers’; the difficulty to obtain space and privacy.
CARE TURNS INTO CONTROL Abbey had had a really bad Saturday night … She had come back here, she was hacked off, she was really angry at me and Alan being … so she went to her room. And the next thing she asked for a glass of juice so I thought ‘Oh, go and give her a glass of juice’ and came up with a glass of juice and she said, it was orange diluting orange juice ‘I wanted fresh orange’. ‘There is no fresh orange.’ ‘Well what about fresh apple?’ No, sorry that’s not what happened. ‘You have fresh orange.’ I says ‘no.’ ‘Well what have you got?’ ‘Well I’ve got diluting blackcurrant.’ ‘I don’t like that.’ ‘I’ve got apple juice.’ ‘I don’t like that.’ ‘Well’ I says, ‘I’ve got diluting orange.’ ‘I don’t like that, I don’t like f***ing anything you’ve got’ and she threw the glass at me and just missed me and I thought well that’s just odd because why would you do that you know. Why, I mean its just a glass of juice, you know and it’s a control thing. It didn’t really matter what I brought up to her, she would have thrown a glass anyway, she was just so, so angry. It doesn’t matter how good the food is or what you put down, it’s just they want to complain. (Liam, Care Worker)
CONTROL TURNS INTO CARE Anyway what he then did was when people weren’t looking was take the egg rolls from the dining room and bring them into the meeting room in here where we are now, knowing, probably knowing full well that, well he knew full well he wasn’t supposed to be here and looking for, probably, some kind of conflict – some way of having some contact. Because actually if he’d just wanted to eat his rolls in peace he would have taken them elsewhere, up to his room or . . . So I came through and I think he was expecting me to say Get those rolls back in the dining room and have a big conflict. I said You seem upset, you seem upset and he was waiting for me, he was looking at me as he was eating and I said Look you know you’re not supposed to eat your rolls in here, however, I can see that you’re upset … the important thing is that you’re upset and we’re worried about you, concerned about you. And Erin had noticed blood on his sheets upstairs and a small razor out of a pencil sharpener and I noticed on his hands, and I commented, I can see you’ve been cutting your hands. Quite calmly without a lot of emotion, and eventually he started to tell me the story of how he did it and he was upset with his sister, had fallen out . . . (Derek, Unit Manager)
IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE • Moving beyond nutrition • Window to the culture as well as the individual • Food as ‘therapy’/recovery • Link to ethos and aims of the service • The power of the everyday
REFLECTIVE TOOL • Personal reflection about you and your child • Guided thinking • Not giving answers but deepening the picture you have • Opening ways of approaching the situation differently • Using it as a springboard into discussion with peers/colleagues
JOTIT NOTEBOOK • Informal way of capturing thoughts and experiences about food practices in your home as they happen • With prompts/questions to encourage reflection around food and the child(ren) you look after • May be used creatively by adding drawings or pictures • Can also be used with children to facilitate food-related discussions
PEER SUPPORT • Making sense of it all… • Discussion with supervisor - individual • Peer group discussion • Opportunity to explore with others the issues emerging from either the Reflective Tool or JOTIT Notebook • How could your peer support (foster care support) meetings help?
INTERACTIVE INTRODUCTION • On the Food for Thought Website • Not personal to any child • Not saved anywhere • For those who are unable to attend the Reflective Workshop • And for those who would like a refresher in the future • Video – members of the original research team talking about the study • Short 4 minute version on the Home page: www.foodforthoughtproject.info • Longer version on the Resources page: www.foodforthoughtproject.info/resources
CLOSE OF WORKSHOP: FEEDBACK • How was it for you? • Review of ‘hopes and fears’ • Thoughts and feelings • Review of learning/action points WHAT DID YOU MOST ENJOY? WHAT MOST SURPRISED YOU? WHAT ASPECTS OF TODAY’S LEARNING WOULD YOU TAKE BACK INTO YOUR PRACTICE?
FEEDBACK TO THE RESEARCH TEAM • Academic team • Ruth Emond – h.r.emond@stir.ac.uk • Samantha Punch – s.v.punch@stir.ac.uk • Ian McIntosh – ian.mcintosh@stir.ac.uk • They would love to hear your views • Food for Thought Website • www.foodforthoughtproject.info